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During a bail review at Central Booking, a judge called 28-year-old Lucresha Mints an extreme threat to public safety and denied bail. Baltimore City police confirm Mints had her two children, ages 12 and 7, in the car when the victims were struck.

"Who would be so relentless? Who would be so heartless? Who would be so heartless to do something like that? It's not that deep. It’s never that deep," witness Teresa Edmunds said.

Two-year-old Joshua Carter was killed, along with 25-year-old Latoya Skipwith. Both were thrown into a church stairway.

Police think Mints had been involved in an argument with Skipwith.

Seven-year-old Neveah Green just doesn't want to talk about what happened. She was injured. Her mother told 11 News she suffered a concussion, received gashes to her ear and face and scrapes to her knees, hands and shoulder. Witnesses said threats were prior to the crash.

"When she got out of the car with a knife, started waving the knife, swinging it and everybody (was) trying to get out of her way. She jumped back in her car because someone told her, ‘Get back in the car,’ or whatever. So she got back in her car and she through it in reverse and she tried to hit us that was right there and we jumped up on the steps and she pulled in drive and came around the corner, came up on the curb and hit them," a witness, who wanted to remain anonymous, said.

Police said they can't confirm information about Mints wielding a knife. She was out on $100,000 bail for allegedly participating in an attack on a 12-year-old girl.

WBAL-TV 11 News has learned that Mints did not have a driver's license, but Maryland Motor Vehicle Administration said she had a valid learner’s permit, which she received in January.

Mints was attending Coppin State University where she was scheduled to get her nursing degree this coming fall.

"I don’t understand. How could you care for people and then kill people? I am a former medical provider and I don’t have a heart like that. How could you care for patients?" Edmunds said.

In court Friday, officials said Mints was working at Maryland General Hospital, which is now known as University of Maryland Medical Center Midtown Campus. However, a spokesperson for the hospital said Mints does not appear on any of their employee listings.